Articles of Incorporation of The Youngstown Iron Sheet and Tube Company were filed with the Secretary of State of Ohio at Columbus on November 23, 1900 and the Company’s existence became effective as of that date.

The Youngstown district plants are located in the cities of Campbell, Youngstown, Struthers, Girard and the village of Hubbard, Ohio.

In 1950 the population of Youngstown is 168,000 and the population of the district including the City of Youngstown exceeds 500,000.

Youngstown Strike is one of Gropper's most compelling works, apparently prompted by the extended strikes staged in 1936-37 by workers at the YoungstownSheet and Tube Company, Youngstown, Ohio.

In painting Youngstown Strike in 1937, he portrayed the workers of 1916 and their families as if they had returned from the past to re-enact their tragedy, reminding the viewer, as well as the exploited laborers themselves, of the falsity of management's assurances.

Youngstown Strike is a powerful work that forcefully communicates the mood of despair which so characterized the Great Depression.

Youngstown has recently been the subject of considerable mention in connection with possible court challenges to post-9/11 Bush Administration initiatives.

Youngstown was the only non-abortion high-court precedent that Sen. Arlen Specter, R-Pa., the Judiciary Committee chairman, mentioned in his opening statement.

Rehnquist, who had served as Jackson's law clerk when Youngstown was issued, found the precedents few and sharply circumscribed; admonished that the court intended Dames & Moore to be extremely narrow; and described Jackson's three-part framework as a spectrum, rather than finely calibrated pigeonholes.

The events in the park and the city surrounding it are emblematic of problems faced by cities throughout the twentieth century-- labor struggles, racial tension, population shifts and the ultimate decline of the industrial base.

The problems in Youngstown were faced by cities across the nation, and many of these problems manifested themselves in these urban amusement parks which provide a window through which we can see the changes in cities in the second half of the twentieth century.

The kids who cut in front of her were loud and a little intimidating, and her sister decided to get into line in front of them and got an angry reaction from the youths, one of whom urinated on her while they were on the ride.

If the recall of General MacArthur reaffirmed the tradition of civilian control over the military, the Steel Seizure case reminded the nation that, even in a war, the president could not act beyond the bounds of his constitutional powers.

For further reading: Maeva Marcus, Truman and the Steel Seizure Case: The Limits of Presidential Power (1977); Alan F. Westin, The Anatomy of a Constitutional Law Case: YoungstownSheet and Tube Co. v.

Anybody following the discussion about the presidential wiretapping scandal has heard reference to “the Youngstown case.” It occurs to me that while this is meaningful to me, it’s likely not to most people.

So I dug up a case brief that I wrote about YoungstownSheet & Tube Co. v.

What Can the NSA Surveillance Hearing Accomplish? - TalkLeft: The Politics of Crime(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-24)

NYU law professor Noah Feldman has an easy to understand op-ed in Sunday's New York Times Magazine on the likely focus of Monday's Senate Judiciary Committee hearing on Bush's warrantless NSA electronic surveillance program and the possible outcomes.

Feldman writes that the starting point for the Senators is likely to be Justice Jackson's concurring opinion in a 1952 case named YoungstownSheet and Tube Company v.

The senators on the judiciary committee are likely to make repeated reference to Justice Robert H. Jackson's canonical concurring opinion in YoungstownSheet and Tube Company v.

The Anatomy of a Constitutional Law Case: YoungstownSheet and Tube Co. v.

Sawyer, ' from its rise in a bargaining dispute in the steel industry during 1952 to the aftermath of its decision by the United States Supreme Court.

Westin includes selections from transcripts, briefs and other official proceedings, adds notes describing each phase of the constitutional process, and a section of commentary and questions relating this case to others.

Title: The Anatomy of a Constitutional Law Case: YoungstownSheet and Tube Co. v.

Title: The Steel Seizure Case; Briefs for the Government and the Companies and the Record Filed in the Supreme Court of the United States in the Steel Seizure Case (the YoungstownSheet and Tube Company, et al.